Denying the creditor’s motion to dismiss, the bankruptcy court in the Southern District of Texas found that it could exercise jurisdiction over a nationwide class and that the claims, based on abuse of process, satisfied the “core proceeding” requirements of subject matter jurisdiction. Jones v. Atlas Acquisitions, LLC, No. 15-34818, Adv. Proc. No. 16-3235 (Bankr. S.D. Tex. May 19, 2017).
Atlas Acquisitions filed a proof of claim in Katrina Jones’s chapter 13 bankruptcy. It later withdrew the claim. Ms. Jones then filed an adversary complaint on behalf of herself and others similarly situated, alleging “abuse of the bankruptcy system by [Atlas’s] willful and intentional disregard for the requirements for filing legitimate claims in many Chapter 13 cases throughout the country.” Specifically, the complaint alleged that, in accordance with its business model, Atlas routinely filed deficient proofs of claim only to withdraw them when challenged. The First Amended Complaint added Natasha Hill, a chapter 13 debtor in the Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Louisiana (case no. 15-3166) as a named plaintiff and sought certification as a class action. Read More